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To Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Carbon Trading
To Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Carbon Trading
to
Clean Development
Mechanism(CDM) and Carbon
Trading
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Contents
• Kyoto Protocol and CDM Context
• Overview of CDM
• CDM Concept
• CDM Objectives
• Types of CDM Projects
• Opportunities of CDM
• Carbon Trading
• Carbon Sellers and Buyers
• In Context of Nepal
• References
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Kyoto Protocol and CDM Context
• Kyoto Protocol drafted at Kyoto, in 1992 to combat
global climate change .
Joint implementation (Developed Countries)
Clean Development Mechanism (Developing Countries)
International Emission Trading (Emission Credit through
special market)
• Committed industrialized countries to legally binding
GHG reduction targets during the period 2008-2012.
• Most countries have to reduce GHG emissions on ave.
5% below their 1990 emission levels
• results in a global target of ‘carbon’ reduction.
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CDM Objectives
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Types of CDM Projects
• Energy efficiency
• End use improvements
• Supply-side improvements
• Renewable energy
• Methane reduction eg. landfill gas capture
• Fuel switching
• Agriculture (CH4 and N20)
• Industrial processes
• Sequestration/sinks – only afforestation and
reforestation
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CDM Project Examples
End-use energy High efficient lighting; efficient
efficiency cook stoves; vehicle efficiency
Supply-side energy High efficiency turbine
efficiency replacement; combine cycle
Renewable energy Biomass; Solar; Wind; Hydro
Fuel switching Gas conversion
Biofuels replace fossil fuels
Forestry Afforestation; Reforestation
Community forestry
Agriculture Intermittent rice field irrigation
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Opportunities of CDM
• CDM encourages developed countries to undertake
GHG reduction projects in developing countries.
• Increased investment flows
• Attract capital for less carbon-intensive projects
• Technology transfer
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Carbon Trading
• Another idea that came about in response to Kyoto Protocol.
• Carbon would be given an economic value, allowing people,
companies or nations to trade it.
• If a nation bought carbon, it would be buying the rights to burn it, and
a nation selling carbon would be giving up its rights to burn it.
• Industrialized nations finds reducing emissions a daunting task.
• They could buy the emission rights from another nation whose
industries do not produce as much of these gases.
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Carbon Sellers and Buyers
source:- (Sada Rajesh, 2007)
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Benefits from Carbon Trading
• the reduction in overall cost of meeting emission reduction targets.
• the progressively improved definition of a "price" for carbon, particularly as the
market becomes more liquid and active, and assuming that all carbon certificate
products are fungible, meaning that they are equivalent ways of addressing
emission reduction;
• the opportunity to generate income from activities that previously attracted no
additional revenue, such as investment in emission reduction, renewable energy
generation, greenhouse friendly fuels and carbon sequestration;
• the ability to use revenue from carbon sequestration to help fund additional
planting of trees and other vegetation, for benefits such as salinity amelioration,
biodiversity enhancement, conversion to greenhouse gas friendly fuels and
energy, and employment and wealth creation in rural areas.
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In Context of Nepal
• Nepal accepted the Kyoto Protocol in 2005, 16th September.
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In Context of Nepal (cont…)
• Nepal signed onto "a carbon emissions reduction" agreement with
the World Bank whereby it will trade surplus carbon for biogas plants.
• The Nepal Biogas Project (NBP) became the first project for carbon
trading under the Clean Development Mechanism of the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change.
• NBP can sell to developed countries the volume equivalent of carbon
emissions it contains and prevents from being released into the
environment.
• Nepal will receive yearly Rs.40.34 million ($568,000) from selling
carbon.
Source:-(International global watch, 2006)
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References
• Edition, S. (n.d.). The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), (Cdm).
• Government of Nepal Ministry of Science , Technology and
Environment Designated National Authority for Clean Development
Mechanism of The Kyoto Protocol April 2013. (2013), (April).
• Promise, T., & Premise, T. (n.d.). What is Clean Development
Mechanism ?
• Sada, R. (2007). Carbon trading.
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_Development_Mechanism
• http://ippan.org.np/23june2006.html
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THANK YOU
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